Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, Woodstock Road, Oxford OX2 6GG, UK.
Center for Public Health Research and Department of Health Management, Evaluation and Policy, University of Montreal, Montreal, QC H3C 3J7, Canada.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Aug 25;19(17):10591. doi: 10.3390/ijerph191710591.
Virtual care spread rapidly at the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Restricting in-person contact contributed to reducing the spread of infection and saved lives. However, the benefits of virtual care were not evenly distributed within and across social groups, and existing inequalities became exacerbated for those unable to fully access to, or benefit from virtual services. This "perspective" paper discusses the extent to which challenges in virtual care access and use in the context of COVID-19 follow the Inverse Care Law. The latter stipulates that the availability and quality of health care is inversely proportionate to the level of population health needs. We highlight the inequalities affecting some disadvantaged populations' access to, and use of public and private virtual care, and contrast this with a utopian vision of technology as the "solution to everything". In public and universal health systems, the Inverse Care Law may manifests itself in access issues, capacity, and/or lack of perceived benefit to use digital technologies, as well as in data poverty. For commercial "Direct-To-Consumer" services, all of the above may be encouraged via a consumerist (i.e., profit-oriented) approach, limited and episodic services, or the use of low direct cost platforms. With virtual care rapidly growing, we set out ways forward for policy, practice, and research to ensure virtual care benefits for everyone, which include: (1) pay more attention to "capabilities" supporting access and use of virtual care; (2) consider digital technologies as a basic human right that should be automatically taken into account, not only in health policies, but also in social policies; (3) take more seriously the impact of the digital economy on equity, notably through a greater state involvement in co-constructing "public health value" through innovation; and (4) reconsider the dominant digital innovation research paradigm to better recognize the contexts, factors, and conditions that influence access to and use of virtual care by different groups.
虚拟医疗在 COVID-19 大流行期间迅速普及。限制人际接触有助于减少感染的传播,拯救生命。然而,虚拟医疗的好处在社会群体内部和之间分配不均,对于那些无法充分获得或受益于虚拟服务的人来说,现有的不平等现象更加恶化。本文讨论了 COVID-19 背景下虚拟医疗可及性和使用方面的挑战在多大程度上符合反向医疗保健定律。后者规定,医疗保健的可及性和质量与人口健康需求水平成反比。我们强调了影响一些弱势群体获得和使用公共和私人虚拟医疗的不平等现象,并将其与技术作为“一切问题的解决方案”的乌托邦愿景进行对比。在公共和全民健康系统中,反向医疗保健定律可能表现在获取问题、能力和/或缺乏使用数字技术的感知效益,以及数据贫困方面。对于商业性的“直接面向消费者”服务,所有这些都可能通过消费者主义(即利润导向)方法、有限和偶发性服务,或使用低成本平台来鼓励。随着虚拟医疗的迅速发展,我们为政策、实践和研究制定了前进的方向,以确保虚拟医疗惠及每个人,包括:(1)更加关注支持虚拟医疗获取和使用的“能力”;(2)将数字技术视为一项基本人权,不仅应在卫生政策中,而且应在社会政策中自动予以考虑;(3)更加认真地对待数字经济对公平的影响,特别是通过更多地参与通过创新共同构建“公共健康价值”;以及(4)重新考虑主导的数字创新研究范式,以更好地认识影响不同群体获取和使用虚拟医疗的背景、因素和条件。